4.2 Article

Weight status and weight-control exercise in adolescents: A longitudinal population-based study

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EATING BEHAVIORS
卷 49, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2023.101725

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Weight-control exercise; Eating disorders; Overweight; Obesity; Adolescents; Excessive exercise

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This study aimed to determine the prevalence rates of weight-control exercise in adolescents and examine the influence of gender and weight status on such exercise. The findings suggest that boys with overweight or obesity have a higher likelihood of engaging in weight-control exercise compared to girls. Accurate identification of at-risk adolescents should consider gender and weight status when defining excessive weight-control exercise.
Objective: Exercise is a transdiagnostic clinical feature of eating disorders, but consensus is lacking as to what constitutes, and gives rise to, excessive exercise motivated by weight control. Using a longitudinal cohort study, we aimed to describe population-level prevalence rates of varying levels of weight-control exercise and examine gender and weight status (overweight or obesity; OVOB) as cross-sectional determinants of weight-control exercise in 14-15-year-old adolescents. We then evaluated the association of OVOB at 10-11 years with weightcontrol exercise at 14-15 years. Methods: The sample comprised 6329 adolescents from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC). Weight and height were measured in early adolescence (aged 10-11) and in mid-adolescence (aged 14-15). Participants reported weight-control exercise using the Branched Eating Disorders Test at 14-15 years. Results: In mid-adolescence, the estimated population prevalence for any weight-control exercise was 49 % (55 % in females). For girls, moderate levels of exercise were most prevalent, and low levels for boys. For all levels except for the very lowest, boys with (vs. without) OVOB history (10-11 years) had about twice the odds of endorsing every level of weight-control exercise. Patterns among girls were similar, though lower in magnitude (similar to 1.5 times). Conclusions: For both girls and boys, across most exercise levels, rates of weight-control exercise were greatest for those with OVOB; for the highest exercise level, effects were strongest for boys with OVOB. To accurately identify at-risk adolescents, our results provide preliminary support for a fluid definition of excessive weight-control exercise, dependent on gender and weight status.

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